State ex rel. Highway Division v. Rosanbalm

571 P.2d 537, 31 Or. App. 717, 1977 Ore. App. LEXIS 2855
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedNovember 15, 1977
DocketNo. 94314, CA 7774
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 571 P.2d 537 (State ex rel. Highway Division v. Rosanbalm) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Highway Division v. Rosanbalm, 571 P.2d 537, 31 Or. App. 717, 1977 Ore. App. LEXIS 2855 (Or. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

JOSEPH, J.

The State of Oregon brought this action in ejectment to recover possession of a 1.5 acre tract. Defendant asserted title by adverse possession as an affirmative defense and counterclaimed for trespass. The trial court, sitting without a jury, found defendants to have title by virtue of their predecessor’s adverse possession. The state appeals.

It was stipulated that the state has a good record title to the disputed property and the defendants have no record title to any of it. By their affirmative defense defendants put in issue title in themselves or third persons, and the burden of proof was theirs. We review to determine whether there was substantial evidence to support the trial court’s determination that defendants have made out a title by adverse possession in someone which was good against the state. Du Val v. Miller, 208 Or 176, 300 P2d 416 (1956).

On the accompanying diagram the land to which the defendants have a record title lies west of the Donation Land Claim line and is designated R. The land to which the state has record title lies east of the Donation Land Claim line and is designated S. Within the bounds of S is the triangular tract (designated D), which is the subject of this dispute. Its westerly line is the Donation Land Claim line. The easterly line to which defendants lay claim is about 470 feet long; the northerly line is about 250 feet long.

[[720]]*[720][[Image here]]

[[721]]*[721]The history of the record titles to tracts S and R is shown by the following:

[[Image here]]

[[722]]*[722]None of the documents in the various transactions specifically mentioned or delineated tract D. In 1976 Downey and Richards quitclaimed any interest they might have in tract D to the Rosanbalms.

The Rosanbalms advanced at least three theories in support of their claim to the triangle. First, they claim Hoyt acquired title by adverse possession against Boone and Bishop prior to their 1957 sale of tract S to the state. Second, Rosanbalms claim their adverse possession and Downey and Richards’ adverse possession should be tacked and the Rosanbalms, as successors to Downey and Richards, got the resulting title by adverse possession against Hoyt.1 Third, they also claim they have gained title in their own right by adverse possession against the state since 1964. Although it does not appear definitively in the record, the pleadings and the evidence amount to a further claim that by tacking adverse possession by Hoyt and Downey and Richards, a title was acquired by the latter which would defeat the state’s claim. 2

The "Order and Decree” entered below is not clear as to which of the theories the court decided was proved. It recited as findings of fact that "the State exercised no dominion and control over the land * * * for any purpose until shortly before the filing of its Complaint” and that the Rosanbalms’ "predecessors had used the land described herein for many years prior to the time of the State’s deed.” Furthermore, there was another so-called finding of fact "[t]hat the land * * * is vested [in defendants] by virtue of adverse possession by their predecessors in interest.”3 [[723]]*[723]The only thing that is clear is that the trial court did not find that the Rosanbalms had made out a title by adverse possession by their own actions.

Hoyt’s deed to Downey and Richards did not convey tract D. i^Hoyt had gained a title by adverse possession, then the Rosanbalms would not have had to show that they, or they and Downey and Richards, got title by adverse possession against Hoyt. Even though Hoyt is not a party here and title as between Rosanbalms and Hoyt cannot be determined, the Rosanbalms can defeat the state by showing title in Hoyt. ORS 105.055.

An issue is raised whether title by adverse possession can be obtained hgainst the state. We need not reach that question if Hoyt had adversely possessed tract D against Boone and Bishop by the time Bishop conveyed to the state in 1957. We begin with that inquiry, noting that each element of adverse possession must be shown by clear and positive proof. Fry v. Woodward, 221 Or 39, 350 P2d 183 (1960); Du Val v. Miller, supra4

There is no evidence that any predecessor of Hoyt claimed tract D. There was evidence that shortly after Hoyt acquired tract R in 1944, or by 1947 at the latest, he fenced his entire property, including along the Donation Land Claim line. Be that as it may, the evidence is clear that when he started his use of tract D there was untrammeled access across the Donation Land Claim line for the piling of gravel from his mining operation. A short section of fence has apparently existed along the southerly portion of the Donation Land Claim line north of the point where the easterly line of tract D meets the Donation Land Claim line. It appears that that fence was not built, maintained or repaired by Hoyt, his successors or the state, and is a mere relic of a long disused barrier [[724]]*[724]which was there before Hoyt owned tract R. Hoyt did not fence the easterly or northerly lines of tract D until 1951 or 1952.

Prior to 1953, and possibly as early as 1947 or 1948, Hoyt or others mining gravel on his property piled a substantial amount of the gravel in the area shown as "Gravel Pile” on the accompanying diagram, supra at page la. After Hoyt sold tract R in 1962, gravel was hauled away from the pile for some undetermined time either by Hoyt or the county. During the period 1952 or 1953 to 1957 the owner of tract S (Bishop) was aware of the gravel pile and hauling operations and knew his land was being used for that purpose. At one time he even noted someone had hung "No Trespassing” signs on the fence Hoyt had built around tract D. Bishop made no effort to interfere with the use of the property. He assumed the county was hauling the gravel, and he never saw any mining operation on Hoyt’s land. An aerial photograph in evidence shows clearly that in 1955 the area of the gravel pile and its access roads formed a large oval in tract D, the outlines of which paralleled and almost touched the westerly half of the northerly fence line and touched the easterly fence line almost at its midpoint. Although the record does not indicate why the fence was built where it is, the 250 foot northerly line runs to a point the shortest eastward distance from which a straight line could be run back to the Donation Land Claim line and still encompass the whole gravel pile.

There was substantial evidence that prior to March 8, 1957, when the state acquired tract S from Bishop, Hoyt had actually possessed tract D in a manner that was open, notorious, hostile, continuous and exclusive since he erected the fence in 1951 or 1952. See Grimstad v. Dordan, 256 Or 135, 471 P2d 778 (1970); Norgard v. Busher, 220 Or 297, 349 P2d 490, 80 ALR2d 1161 (1960). The question remains whether that adverse possession can be carried back to early 1947, the time the possession would have to have begun to have ripened into title by early 1957.

[[725]]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Knapp v. Daily
772 P.2d 1363 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1989)
Verret v. DeHarpport
621 P.2d 598 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1980)
Allison v. Shepherd
591 P.2d 735 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1979)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
571 P.2d 537, 31 Or. App. 717, 1977 Ore. App. LEXIS 2855, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-highway-division-v-rosanbalm-orctapp-1977.